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Published byRoderick Beasley Modified over 8 years ago
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Sponsor: Name & Affiliation Faculty Advisor: Name Put a picture of what was created here
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Vinh Diep Project Manager & Embedded Systems Engineer I Francisco Saavedra Test Engineer & Embedded Systems Engineer II Matthew Bringhurst Design Engineer Team Members
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Project Overview Design Approach Results Future Work
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GOALS OF PROJECT STRETCH GOALS Create Low powered Sensing Node Capture both AC/DC Voltages and Currents from Solar Panel or Wind Turbine systems Wirelessly transmit processed data through TWP and IoT Gateway to the Proximetry Cloud Server Updates values every 15 seconds to Proximetry PCB Design Recharge circuit by Solar panel or wind turbine
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The problem: o Wired Systems o Expensive o No complete system in place Why is this important? o Remote monitoring o Scalable – Reduction of cost
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Continued collaboration between NXP and Texas State University Develop a prototype and demonstrate functionality using NXP development tools (Kinetis KW24 TOWER board etc.) Provided technology and technical advise
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I-V Sensor Node Device Cost ItemsCost MAX4194 (2)$5.38 1N4004 (6)$.78 10k resistor (5)$.66 330k resistor (1)$.47 3.65k resistor (1)$.61 100mA fuses (3)$.66 Fuse Holders (3)$6.78 PCB Board (1)$15 50A /.075V Shunt (1)$5 Enclosure (1)$7 Terminal Strip (1)$2.89 Voltage Regulators (2)$4 Total$49.23 We planned that unit would cost under $25. The unit actually cost $49.23. The main I-V sensor cost $39.95 We’ve spent over $300 in rookie mistakes: Understanding certain components (ex. shunt) Testing out different versions of analog design
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16 bit MKW24 MCU and Tower Board Development System Thread Wireless Protocol Build the device based on Wind Turbine and Solar panel Voltage and Current maximum output 300V, 50A Single Supply Operation
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Design and simulate Analog circuit with a Spice Program Test for Linearity Implement ADC for Voltage, Current, and DC Offset Data Correction Implement moving Average for True RMS Utilize thread library to implement TWP and send data to Proximetry GUI
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Device is fully functional with minimal error High Voltage AC and DC test, low DC current tested Readings are in TRUE RMS Dynamic DC offset calibration Frequency of Proximetry were within reason Accomplished Stretch Goal: PCB assembled, test, and enclosed. Battery and MKW24 also enclosed.
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3 ADCs for Voltage, Current, and DC offset, respectively pins 80, 79, 78 on the MKW24 DC Input Voltage Expected Digital Value Actual Digital Value % Error 0.5007V 10769 10758 0.1022 1.5020V 32262 32255 0.0217 2.5009V 53787 53810 0.0427 DC Input Voltage Expected Digital Value Actual Digital Value% Error 0.5007V10769107580.1022 1.5020V32262322550.0217 2.5009V53787538100.0427
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1) Stable DC Offset Voltage 2) Convert the digital representation into Voltages (1-1 ratio) 3) Plot a regression and find the slope and offset, this will be used for data correction. 4) Check Proximetry values against Voltmeter/Ammeter
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DC offset is used in data correction calculations Changes in reference voltage over time will cause an increase in error Our Solution: Dynamic reference voltage utilizing another ADC
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DC Test – up to 200V, up to 3.18A AC Test – up to 150VRMS *AC Current is to be tested
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* Output from Putty
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Average Power Consumption testing to improve life of the battery. Our second stretch goal was create a recharge circuit User controlled updating to control the frequency to the Proximetry Servers. High Current sampling to properly improve data correction factor for AC/DC Current Research on Wind Turbine and Solar Panel abnormal behaviors/errors to improve error handling
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Dr. Kevin Kemp (NXP) – Technical advisor and Sponsor Dr. William Stapleton (Texas State) – Faculty advisor Dr. Rich Compeau (Texas State) – Faculty advisor Sarah Rivas – Texas State Gatekeeper
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